Chiseche Salome Mibengehttp://elevatedifference.com/taxonomy/term/2336/all
enHeart of the City: Nine Tales of Love and Serendipity on the Streets of New Yorkhttp://elevatedifference.com/review/heart-city-nine-tales-love-and-serendipity-streets-new-york
<div class="node">
<div class="review-image">
<div class="field field-type-filefield field-field-review-image">
<div class="field-items">
<div class="field-item odd">
<img src="http://elevatedifference.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/review_image_full/review_images/screen_shot_2011-03-14_at_11.40.15_pm.png" alt="" title="" class="imagecache imagecache-review_image_full imagecache-default imagecache-review_image_full_default" width="300" height="453" /> </div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="meta-terms">
<div class="author">By <a href="/author/ariel-sabar">Ariel Sabar</a></div><div class="publisher"><a href="/publisher/da-capo-press">Da Capo Press</a></div> </div>
<p>I believe in magic. I really do.</p>
<p>I am fresh off the boat but I have already learned that there is some divine sleight of hand that makes any form of human connection possible in New York City’s bustling boroughs.</p>
<p>Ariel Sabar believes that sleights such as: a missed train connection; a turn one block too early; and a misplaced address brought his collection of strangers together at a prominent New York landmark and then kept them together, married, presumably, happily ever after.</p>
<p>The couples selected by Sabar in the nine stories that comprise <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0738213799/ref=as_li_tf_tl?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=feminrevie-20&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creative=9325&amp;creativeASIN=0738213799">Heart of the City</a></em> are a hodgepodge: in "Central Park" he narrates the love story of a teen runaway and a gallant sailor, in "The Subway" it is a Filipino bank teller and an American classical music reviewer and in "Liberty Enlightening the World" a German factory worker collides happily with a bubbly Long Island divorcee and her family.</p>
<p>Sabar venerates romance and marriage. He is clearly enamored with his cast of lovers, and this is charming and a testament to the many hours he spent interviewing them—in one case more than sixty years after their love first blossomed in New York. But Sabar’s micro-detail of that first lingering gaze, the agonized "she loves me she loves me not" internal chorus, the pouting lips that invite an inaugural kiss, the first amorous letter signed "love and kisses" is closer to banal than magical.</p>
<p>The love stories are a bad fit for a collection of short stories and I might have found them more endearing had I stumbled across them piecemeal in the "Weddings &amp; Celebrations" section of the <em>New York Times</em>. Having said this I must add that none of Sabar’s couples are black or Hispanic, and none are same-sex—these groups do get to tell their fairy tale stories too in the "Weddings &amp; Celebrations" section of the <em>New York Times</em>.</p> <div>
<span class="reviewer-names"><strong>Written by:</strong> <a href="/reviewer/chiseche-salome-mibenge">Chiseche Salome Mibenge</a></span>, March 19th 2011 </div>
<div class="tag-list">Tags: <a href="/tag/stories">stories</a>, <a href="/tag/romance">romance</a>, <a href="/tag/new-york-city">New York City</a></div> </div>
http://elevatedifference.com/review/heart-city-nine-tales-love-and-serendipity-streets-new-york#commentsBooksAriel SabarDa Capo PressChiseche Salome MibengeNew York CityromancestoriesSat, 19 Mar 2011 20:00:00 +0000payal4578 at http://elevatedifference.comThe Company of Heaven: Stories from Haitihttp://elevatedifference.com/review/company-heaven-stories-haiti
<div class="node">
<div class="review-image">
<div class="field field-type-filefield field-field-review-image">
<div class="field-items">
<div class="field-item odd">
<img src="http://elevatedifference.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/review_image_full/review_images/phipps-kettlewell.jpg" alt="" title="" class="imagecache imagecache-review_image_full imagecache-default imagecache-review_image_full_default" width="100" height="167" /> </div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="meta-terms">
<div class="author">By <a href="/author/marilene-phipps-kettlewell">Marilene Phipps-Kettlewell</a></div><div class="publisher"><a href="/publisher/university-iowa-press">University of Iowa Press</a></div> </div>
<p>Marilène Phipps-Kettlewell's collection of short stories, <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1587299216?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=feminrevie-20&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creative=9325&amp;creativeASIN=1587299216">The Company of Heaven</a></em>, is an unkind narrative of Haiti and Haitians. It is unkind in the way one can be unkind when recalling a sibling’s awkward puberty or seeing for the first time, the humiliation of a parent by a stranger in a public place. She is unkind to her Haitians and yet she remains a family member, intimately invested and loyal. It is difficult to like even one of her characters, however, it is even more difficult to look away from them.</p>
<p>In "Meat," a stranger stranded at the airport in Boston describes the contents of her suitcase. Cooked meat to delight her undernourished relatives in Haiti for at least a week. The traveler cannot stop returning to Haiti and yet she describes a mean Haiti where dog fights dog and even goat, and family members are picked up off the street by masked men and discovered decomposing in sewage holes.</p>
<p>The living are also decomposing: there is sickness in Haiti and Phipps-Kettlewell rarely distinguishes between mental, spiritual and physical corrosion. There is cancer, old age, the lust for little girls, insanity, and AIDS too—a disease that wipes out a circle of beautiful boys and men in the story "River Valley Rooms." The narrator mourns in rooms inhabited by decaying family and filthy dogs. The narrator has returned from the US and becomes the reluctant heir to her late father’s patriarchy: spying on her brother Justin and her mother and saving them from an encroaching army of parasites siphoning off the illusory remains of the family wealth and status.</p>
<p>And yet Phipps-Kettlewell’s characters are not caricatures of rich and poor in a poor country. Neither the poor or the rich are noble, and the power (im)balance between the two fluctuates within each story. Phipps-Kettlewell never allows the servants, workers, guards, gardeners and other dependents of the masters to be powerless. In "Down by the River," it is the servant Venant who carries the collapsed patriarch Misye Emanyèl from his shower and hands him his teeth. There are the legion of servants who attend Misye Emanyèl’s funeral bringing their children and grandchildren: "They were there to bury our dead. We were never there to bury theirs."</p>
<p>The servants and poor Haitians are at the disposal of the elite, they stoke the masters’ vanities, witness their follies and also fan their paranoia. In "Land," a woman who describes herself as French and proud of it, is swindled and threatened by Sasal, her son’s poor friend, in a land deal gone wrong. Sasal is sick of ‘these bourgeois’ but accepts their money. In "Down by the River," the daughter recently bereaved by her father’s death seduces a poor child with a new dress, running water and the promise of America—she steals her away from an impoverished but devastated surrogate mother. And in "Marie Ange’s Ginen," a wily American immigrant returns to his community and extorts a travel fee from friends desperate to flee poverty. The vessel to America is overcrowded, poorly constructed and destined to sink. And yet an old mother boards it and makes a pact with death, with the ocean, with ocean zombies, that she may be taken but that her daughter must survive and escape misery.</p>
<p>Phipps-Kettlewell’s stories describe poor people, even her rich prose cannot conceal their poverty of both spirit and pocket. Her narrators do not conceal depravity, failure, perversion, grief, and longing. As a result, her fiction cannot be conventionally beautiful... but it is true.</p> <div>
<span class="reviewer-names"><strong>Written by:</strong> <a href="/reviewer/chiseche-salome-mibenge">Chiseche Salome Mibenge</a></span>, November 2nd 2010 </div>
<div class="tag-list">Tags: <a href="/tag/short-stories">short stories</a>, <a href="/tag/poverty">poverty</a>, <a href="/tag/haiti">Haiti</a>, <a href="/tag/fiction">fiction</a></div> </div>
http://elevatedifference.com/review/company-heaven-stories-haiti#commentsBooksMarilene Phipps-KettlewellUniversity of Iowa PressChiseche Salome MibengefictionHaitipovertyshort storiesTue, 02 Nov 2010 16:00:00 +0000priyanka4291 at http://elevatedifference.com